Qatar Tribune

Trump Puts Americans Last On July 4th

Trump’s threat to veto a $740 billion defence bill if military bases named for Confederat­e military leaders are renamed is blatantly divisive during the July 4 week

- TRUDY RUBIN TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE (Trudy Rubin is a columnist and editorial-board member for the Philadelph­ia Inquirer)

THERE is something especially grotesque about the timing of President Donald Trump’s pledge to veto a 740 billion defence bill if military bases named for Confederat­e military leaders are renamed. He made this pledge during the July 4th holiday week.

This is a moment when Americans are roiling over issues of racial intoleranc­e that date back to America’s founding, including whether and what historic statues deserve to be toppled because of racist taint, even if they represent some ounding athers.

The president’s signature divisivene­ss comes at a moment when much of the country is also reeling from a coronaviru­s resurgence, even as he refuses to mask in public. And during a week when he sloughed off revelation­s that Russia may have paid bounties to Talibanlin­ked Afghans to kill US soldiers.

et Trump’s Independen­ce Day timing is fortunate. It symbolises his total uninterest in pulling this country together. And it forces all Americans to confront the urgent need for new leadership that will finally put Americans first.

No trip to Mount Rushmore can change this fact In endorsing Confederat­e traitors and racists, Trump is totally out of tune with the historical moment.

These bases were named for war criminals such as Confederat­e general George Pickett, a man accused of cowardice at Gettysburg, who bragged about executing Union prisoners. Or Henry Lewis Benning, who advocated that African Americans weren’t really human.

The purpose of these base names was to embrace white supremacy within the military during the first half of the 20th century, a time when Black servicemen and -women were treated with brutal discrimina­tion.

The Pentagon supports these name changes. Prominent US military leaders, active and retired, support them. Even senior Republican leaders support them. or heaven’s sake, the state of Mississipp­i has joined the Navy, Marine Corps, and NASCAR in recently removing displays of the Confederat­e ag.

July 4th would have been the perfect moment for a president of all Americans to throw his support behind this healing gesture. Instead, intent on solidifyin­g his shrinking base, the president put Trump first.

Of course, beyond changing base names and removing statues of Confederat­e leaders, the broader issue of what historic statues are offensive is con icting the country.

I would prefer to draw limits, considerin­g the intent of the historical figure, however awed some of their actions.

Confederat­e generals fought to maintain slavery. George Washington owned slaves but was the father of this nation and ensured that it did not become a new monarchy. Thomas Jefferson drafted an independen­ce declaratio­n that introduced Enlightenm­ent principles of freedom and equality that changed the world, even if Americans still struggle to implement them fully. It is those very principles that define the racial equality protesters seek today.

I have spent so much time in dictatorsh­ips and authoritar­ian nations that wholly lacked those freedoms that I remain in awe of the achievemen­t of those founding fathers. As Joe Biden put it this past week, there is “a distinctio­n” between “whether or not George Washington or Thomas Jefferson owned slaves, and somebody who was ... committing treason ... to keep slavery.”

With a leader of all Americans in the White House, the statue debate could be a teachable moment, and this holiday the time for national introspect­ion. Instead the country gets a tweet-slammerin-chief in search of 2020 votes. Instead of Americans first it gets Trump first.

And when it comes to putting Americans last during the holiday, Trump’s attitude toward new allegation­s about Russia is particular­ly illuminati­ng. Whether or not Russia actually paid bounties to kill Americans, it’s no secret that Russia has been cultivatin­g the Taliban. As told to me by Tina Kaidanow, a former top State Department official who served as the number two at the US Embassy in Kabul in 2012 and 2013 “Everyone knew that the Russians had been mucking around in Afghanista­n for a long time. Of course the Russians and the Taliban want us gone and are making common cause.”

The real issue here is Trump’s unwillingn­ess to confront Vladimir Putin on Russia’s malignant behaviour toward America. And his refusal to listen to or read intelligen­ce briefings.

Trump has said publicly he believes the Russian leader over US intelligen­ce agencies. This delusion born of a consistent unwillingn­ess to critique Putin

puts American soldiers at risk not only in Afghanista­n, but elsewhere. or example, in Syria, Russian mercenarie­s have attacked US troops in the past.

So instead of pulling the country together during multiple crises, Trump turned the July 4th week into a new display of divisivene­ss. Instead of defending the safety of US soldiers, Trump chose to attack journalist­s and stay silent on the substance of Russian aggression. During the holiday, Trump still refused to wear a mask in public, even as a COVID-19 resurgence led to cancellati­on of fireworks and closing of beaches.

This divisivene­ss is becoming so obvious never more clearly than the president’s embrace of racist base names that a majority of Americans may finally be awakening. We need a president who will pull the country together and put Americans irst, not Trump irst.

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